41mm upside down forks, with adjustable preload, rebound and compression
damping, 130mm travel
Rear Suspension
Kayaba monoshock with piggy back reservoir, adjustable for preload, rebound
and compression damping, 130mm rear wheel travel
Front Brakes
2x 308mm floating discs, 4 piston radial calipers
Rear Brakes
Single 220mm disc 1 piston caliper
Front Tyre
120/80 ZR17
Rear Tyre
180/55 ZR17
Seat Height
805 mm / 31.7 in
Wet-Weight
189 kg / 416 lb
Fuel Capacity
17.4 Litres / 4.6 gal
Consumption average
19.5 km/lit
Standing
¼ Mile
11.5 sec
Top Speed
227.4 km/h
Take a standard Street Triple
and add supersport specification suspension and brakes. Mix in some premium
colour schemes and take the skills and experience of Triumph’s outstanding
development engineers to hone to perfection. The result? A motorcycle that
has won universal acclaim since its introduction in 2008 and which it
guaranteed to leave the rider grinning from ear to ear.
The Street Triple R’s lightweight frame has been lifted directly from the
award winning Daytona 675 sports bike. Fitted with fully adjustable front
and rear suspension, Nissin four-piston radial front calipers and radial
master cylinder, the Street Triple R’s sublime handling and control are the
stuff of legend. You won’t believe it’s a 675.
For the 2012 model year, the Street Triple R enjoys a stylish makeover with
a host of detail changes, bold new colours and graphics, stylish brushed
metal finishes and aggressive new headlights shared with the bigger Speed
Triple. Distinguishing the Street Triple R are three stunning colour
schemes: Diablo Red, Crystal White and a striking Phantom Black and gold
combination. The Street Triple R is not a subtle motorcycle. It’s a bike for
those who like to take it to the max.
Front Brakes: Twin 308mm floating discs. Nissin 4-piston radial calipers
Top notch and fully adjustable suspension front and rear mark the Street
Triple R out as a machine for riders who just live for the twisties.
Confidence inspiring four piston radial caliper brakes up front ensure that
this is one bike that will stop as well as it goes. And because we know
you’re going to want to do some track days, we’ve prewired the Street Triple
R to take our plug and play quickshifter and even fitted a 99-lap timer to
record your personal bests.
Engine Liquid cooled, 12 valve DOHC, in line three-cylinder 675cc 106PS
Brakes Supersport specification twin-piston radial brakes ensure the Street
Triple R stops on demand.
Handling Intuitive. Think of an apex? You just hit it.
Review
Triumph's Street Triple has been
an amazing showroom success. It combines the looks of the big 1050cc Speed
Triple with the size and handling of the Daytona 675, making it an
incredibly capable and entertaining motorcycle. More than 40,000 examples of
this middleweight naked bike have been sold worldwide since 2007, with sales
holding steady despite the economic recession.
For 2012 the legendary streetfighter has undergone a pronounced visual
update, plus many subtle, unannounced mechanical refinements. The bike has
been "de-chromed," with brushed-steel exhaust headers, heel guards and
silencers replacing the previous polished items. The cockpit now houses a
new dash as well as the tapered handlebar used on the new Speed Triple. The
smaller bike also gets its bigger brother's pentagonal headlights, much to
many riders' chagrin. "Originally we planned to keep the same lights as
before on both models," admits Triumph's Product Manager Simon Warburton.
"Some will like them, others won't. But it's the bike underneath that
counts."
The opportunity to borrow one of the first Street Triple Rs reinforced
Warburton's point. There's no getting away from it: This is one of the most
practical yet spectacular motorcycles on the market today. It's amazingly
fun to ride and packs a far bigger punch than one would expect. The bike is
built on the Daytona 675 sportbike's frame and employs the same engine,
although cam profiles and fueling have been altered to increase the motor's
already broad spread of power. Preload-only adjustment on the fork and shock
and two-piston front brake calipers help keep the price down on the base
Street Triple, while the R-model I rode comes equipped with the same fully
adjustable Kayaba dampers and four-piston Nissin calipers employed on the
Daytona.
2012 Triumph Street Triple Still
The Street Triple's motor has the same exhilarating acceleration as the
Daytona's, but with even more torque coming online even earlier. This means
that on curvy country roads you can hold a single gear and work the
throttle, although it's far more enjoyable to work the gearbox and revel in
the three-cylinder motor's glorious muted howl, expressed via those
great-sounding twin underseat cans.
Familiar as the triple's performance is, the bike exhibited greater
refinement in shifting and throttle response, which I mentioned to
Warburton. "All our bikes are subject to continuous improvement, so any
existing Triumph model you ride this year will be subtly different from last
year's," he says. "We identified a problem with the gearbox detent spring,
and that's been remedied on this bike." What a difference a simple spring
makes! Changing gears is smoother, slicker and more precise while fueling
feels as good as it gets. In regards to the improved throttle response
(ideal is the appropriate word), Warburton revealed that the bike employs a
whole new EFI strategy that selects from different ignition maps based on
throttle application rather than position. "It's like having separate Sport
and Leisure riding maps that are applied automatically depending on how
aggressive you are with the throttle," he explains. "The end result is
calibration that's much smoother when riding slowly, but still lively and
responsive on the open road." This strategy is being applied to all of
Triumph's models, but don't expect them to brag about it!
2012 Triumph Street Triple Action
Other covert improvements include a switch from Dunlop tires to World
Supersport-developed dual-compound Pirelli Diablo Supercorsa Pros, which
offer quicker warm-up as well as more grip. The Pirellis are also lighter,
as is the Street Triple's rear wheel, which lost several pounds back in '09.
Less unsprung weight means the suspension works better and handling is
sharper, and indeed the Street Triple is one flickable and fast streetbike.
Completing the list of improvements are the thinner-section exhaust headers
and a magnesium cam cover that saves a little weight, as well as new
cylinder liners that reduce engine noise. The brakes work amazingly well,
but given the bike's claimed 416-lb. wet weight, those Nissin pinchers don't
have a whole lot to stop!
We already knew the Street Triple was a great bike, but this revamped
version is subtly better. Maneuverable and agile, it's an ideal tool for the
urban jungle, with great leverage from that one-piece handlebar.
Surprisingly, it seems to fit riders of all statures and both sexes,
although the sidestand is sometimes awkward to find and the lack of bungee
hooks is inconvenient. Still, the fresh restyling retains the perky posture
of the original Street Triple while suitably refreshing it. Triumph has
indeed made the best better, again raising the bar for the rest of the
class-and that's not the Union Jack on my helmet talking! And since the 2012
models are priced the same as the 2011s ($8899 for the base model and $9599
for the R), the success of Triumph's middleweight streetfighter is sure to
continue.
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